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deltalactams

Deltalactams are six-membered cyclic amides, a class of lactams in which the amide linkage is contained within a six-membered ring. In lactam-size nomenclature, these are called delta-lactams. The prototypical member is piperidin-2-one (commonly written as 2-piperidone), in which the carbonyl carbon is directly adjacent to the ring nitrogen.

Most deltalam s are derivatives of the 2-piperidone core, including N-substituted and N-acylated variants. The six-membered

Synthesis of deltalamts commonly involves cyclization (lactamization) of appropriate amino acid derivatives or amino alcohol precursors

In medicinal and organic synthesis, deltalamts are used as core scaffolds for exploring chemical space. Their

ring
provides
a
relatively
rigid,
polar
scaffold
due
to
the
amide
functional
group,
and
it
can
participate
in
typical
amide
chemistry
as
well
as
ring-selective
transformations.
Deltalactams
are
generally
stable
under
standard
laboratory
conditions
but
can
undergo
hydrolysis
or
ring-opening
under
strongly
acidic
or
basic
environments,
respectively.
to
form
the
six-membered
ring
with
an
embedded
amide.
Other
routes
include
ring
expansion
or
contraction
strategies
starting
from
related
lactams
or
amide-containing
intermediates.
N-substituted
2-piperidones
and
other
2-piperidone
derivatives
are
widely
reported
in
the
literature
as
versatile
building
blocks.
combination
of
ring
size,
heteroatoms,
and
functionalizability
makes
them
valuable
in
the
development
of
pharmaceuticals
and
in
the
preparation
of
libraries
of
heterocyclic
compounds.